cocktail bar

The Bar Wizards

The BarWizards (Neil Lowrey and Neil Garner) are a BritishFlair bartending act. They first rose to fame when they were finalists in the first series of the British television talent show Britain's Got Talent in 2007, in which they lost to the eventual winner, singer Paul Potts. The BarWizards started off as bartenders but now perform their Tandem Flair Show worldwide, and bartend at private parties.

Background

The BarWizards, Neil Lowrey and Neil Garner are from Manchester. Garner originally worked as a bartender in Stockport and Lowrey in Blackley. They met while competing in flare bartending competitions and teamed up as a double act. BarWizards International came into being in early 2005, as a result of a partnership between Lowrey and Garner. The pair already had ten years experience in the bar industry and had worked in over fifty countries. This led them to make a show which they believed would allow them to work as performers and entertainers.

Tandem Flair Show

The main performance of the BarWizards is their Tandem Flair show which they created in 2005 and which they performed at the King of the Ring World Championships, in Las Vegas, United States where they finished in second place. They then promoted their new show around the United Kingdom, and soon found interest in the corporate market as an after dinner show, allowing them the opportunity to develop the routine, and hone their tandem skills, whilst experimenting with new moves, music and themes. This culminated in a performance at the 2006 Roadhouse World Finals in Covent Garden, London.

Their act includes flipping, spinning, throwing, catching, shaking and pouring their way through a routine using bottles, tins, glasses, and bar equipment.

Britain's Got Talent

The BarWizards were one of the finalists in the show and one of just two acts in the final featuring more than one person, with the other being Kombat Breakers. An ITV poll found that 64% of people enjoyed singing acts the most, with 60% predicting the winner would be a singer. The BarWizards act consisted of flair bartending, juggling and throwing glass bottles and cocktail tins, all choreographed to music. At the finale of their act they rainbow poured drinks (up to six at one time) in Red, White and Blue to match their "British Theme".

The BarWizards responded to criticism that their act was not varied enough to perform at the Royal Variety Performance by adding new elements, such as hitting each other over the head with sugar bottles. Overall judges comments were positive with judge Piers Morgan describing them as "highly amusing".

The BarWizards were part of Hellman'sMayonnaise squeezy campaign in a television commercial and web campaign "Squeezy Skills" where they displayed other uses for their flair skills by making sandwiches using flair bartending. The BarWizards continue to event bartend, have also developed a mobile cocktail bar service.

They also run Flair and Mixology training courses, where they train flair bartenders.